Daniel LaChance
- Published in print:
- 2016
- Published Online:
- May 2017
- ISBN:
- 9780226066691
- eISBN:
- 9780226066721
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
- DOI:
- 10.7208/chicago/9780226066721.003.0008
- Subject:
- History, American History: 20th Century
For years, cultural constructions of executable subjects and the killing state have attempted to maintain the death penalty’s sublime possibilities in spite of its increasingly prosaic form. From ...
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For years, cultural constructions of executable subjects and the killing state have attempted to maintain the death penalty’s sublime possibilities in spite of its increasingly prosaic form. From dying declarations on Texas’s death row website to prosecutorial rhetoric in Houston courtrooms to the redemption narratives of films like The Green Mile, the cultural life of capital punishment has continuously worked to deinstitutionalize the act of sentencing a person to death and executing him. In these practices, speeches, and stories, the imposition of a death sentence could become an act that was spiritually regenerating and morally meaningful. Over time, however, retributive rhetoric has lost its ability to compensate for technocratic reality. A dawning conservative disillusionment with the death penalty, the result of this failure, is perhaps the most crucial part of the steady decline of support for the death penalty over the past fifteen years.Less
For years, cultural constructions of executable subjects and the killing state have attempted to maintain the death penalty’s sublime possibilities in spite of its increasingly prosaic form. From dying declarations on Texas’s death row website to prosecutorial rhetoric in Houston courtrooms to the redemption narratives of films like The Green Mile, the cultural life of capital punishment has continuously worked to deinstitutionalize the act of sentencing a person to death and executing him. In these practices, speeches, and stories, the imposition of a death sentence could become an act that was spiritually regenerating and morally meaningful. Over time, however, retributive rhetoric has lost its ability to compensate for technocratic reality. A dawning conservative disillusionment with the death penalty, the result of this failure, is perhaps the most crucial part of the steady decline of support for the death penalty over the past fifteen years.